Title: Shakespeare%20(1564-1616)
1Shakespeare (1564-1616)
- Born in Stratford-on-Avon
- Married, 2 daughters
- Moved to London
- The Chamberlain's Men
2Shakespeares Major Plays
1599 - Julius Caesar1599-1600 - As You Like
It1600-02 - Twelfth Night1600-O1 -
Hamlet1597-1601 - The Merry Wives of
Windsor1600-O1 - "The Phoenix and the
Turtle"1601-02 - Troilus and Cressida1602-04
- All's Well That Ends Well1603-04 -
Othello1604 - Measure for Measure1604-09 -
Timon of Athens1605-06 - King Lear1605-06 -
Macbeth1606-07 - Antony and Cleopatra1607-09 -
Coriolanus1608-09 - Pericles1609-1O -
Cymbeline161O-1I - The Winter's Tale161I - The
Tempest1612-13 - Henry VIII1613 - The Two Noble
Kinsmen
- 1588-93 - The Comedy of Errors1588-92 - Henry
VI (three parts)1592-93 - Richard III1592-94 -
Titus Andronicus1593-94 - The Taming of the
Shrew1593-94 - The Two Gentlemen of
Verona1593-94 - "The Rape of
Lucrece"1593-1600 - "Sonnets"1588-95 - Love's
Labor's Lost1594-96 - Romeo and Juliet1595 -
Richard II1594-96 - A Midsummer Night's
Dream1590-97 - King John1592 - "Venus and
Adonis"1596-97 - The Merchant of Venice1597 -
Henry IV (Part I)1597-98 - Henry IV (Part
II)1598-1600 - Much Ado About Nothing1598-99
- Henry V
3Globe Playhouse, London
4Staging Areas
- Stage platform that extended into the pit
- Dressing storage rooms in galleries behind
above stage - second-level gallery upper stage famous
balcony scene in R J - Trap door - ghosts
- Heavens - angelic beings
5- Many playwrights with nowhere to play
- Barn turned into theatre (Yeah!)
- Puritans burn it down (Evil theatre! Boo!)
- Globe built! (Yeah!)
- Globe burns (sniff, darn cannon!)
- Globe rebuilt! (Yeah!)
- Globe burns (Dang that Fire of London!)
The Globe
Reconstructed in the 1990s
6The Theater
- Plays produced for the general public
- Roofless open air
- No artificial lighting
- Courtyard surrounded by 3 levels of galleries
7- Aristocrats
- The Queen/King
- The Groundlings!
8Spectators
- Wealthy got benches
- Groundlings poorer people stood and watched
from the courtyard (pit) - All but wealthy were uneducated/illiterate
- Much more interaction than today
9When in a play...
- Only men were permitted to perform
- Boys or effeminate men were used to play the
women - Costumes were often the companys most valuable
asset - Costumes were made by the company, bought in
London, or donated by courtiers
10Differences
- No scenery
- Settings - references in dialogue
- Elaborate costumes
- Plenty of props
- Fast-paced, colorful-2 hours!
11The Cost of a Show
- 1 shilling to stand
- 2 shillings to sit in the balcony
- 1 shilling was 10 of their weekly income
- Broadway Today
- 85 Orchestra
- 60 Balcony
- 10 of a teachers weekly salary
12Shakespeare
- Wrote 37 plays between 1588 and 1613
- About 1.5 per year
- Directed and starred in the plays
- Wrote 154 sonnets
13New Words
- Solidified the English language
- Dante did the same for Italian
- Luther and Goethe did the same for German
- Used nouns as verbs
- Over 2000 new words
- critical, aggravate, assassination
- monumental, castigate, countless
- Obscene, forefathers, frugal, hurry
- Majestic, homicide, summit, reliance
- Coined Phrases
14- "Shakespeare had a huge vocabulary. In the
collected editions of his works--the first folio
that was published seven years after his
death--there are 27,000 different, individual
words. In the King James translation of the
Bible, which was published twelve years earlier,
there are 7,000 words." - --Excerpt from Professor Peter Saccio's course
"Shakespeare The Word and The Action"
15Shakespeares Phrases
- Its Greek to me
- Vanished into thin air
- Refused to budge an inch
- Green-eyed jealousy
- Played fast and loose
- Tongue-tied
- Hoodwinked
- In a pickle
- Fair play
- Slept not one wink
- Stood on ceremony
- Laughed yourself into stitches
- Too much of a good thing
16Shakespeares Phrases
- If you have seen better days
- High time
- The long and short of it
- Lie low
- Have your teeth set on edge
- Without rhyme or reason
- To give the devil his due
- If you bid me good riddance and send me packing
- Dead as a door-nail
- An eyesore
- A laughing stock
- By Jove!
17Blank Verse
- Most of Shakespeares works are written in it
- unrhymed verse
- iambic (unstressed, stressed)
- pentameter( 5 feet to a line)
- ends up to be 10 syllable lines
18Prose
- Ordinary writing that is not poetry, drama, or
song - Only characters in the lower social classes speak
this way in Shakespeares plays - Why do you suppose that is?
19Macbeth
The tragedy of
- Set in Scotland
- Written for King James I (formerly of Scotland,
now England) - Queen of Denmark (Jamess sister) was visiting
- Shakespeare researched The Chronicles - Banquo is
an ancestor of King James I
20- King Duncan of Scotland
- Murdered by cousin Macbeth
- Honest and good
- Malcolm Donalbain
- Sons of the King
- Malcolm is the eldest son
- Macbeth
- Duncans most courageous general
- Ambition to become king corrupts him causing him
to murder Duncan
The Characters
21- Banquo
- General and Macbeths best friend
- Suspects Macbeth in Duncans murder
- An actual ancestor of King James I
- Lady Macbeth
- As ambitious as her husband
- A dark force behind his evil deeds
- Macduff
- Scottish general, suspects Macbeth of murdering
the king - Macbeth has his family murdered
- Swears vengeance
22The Curse!
23The Scottish Play
- It is believed to be bad luck to even squeak the
word Macbeth in a theatre - Legend has it you will lose all your friends
involved in the production--horribly - MORE ON THAT LATER...
24The Tragic Hero
25- Def. Man of high standard who falls from that
high because of a flaw that has affected many -
Aristotle - Macbeth is one of the most famous examples of the
tragic hero.
However, how could John Proctor also be one?
26So what really happens?
- Good guy goes bad
- Guy wants power
- Married to a pushy control freak
- She wants power
- Kills people- LOTS of people
- Gets power
- Gets paranoid (a.k.a. goes crazy)
- Ticks off a lot of people
- Want more power! Kill! Kill!
- Gets whats coming to him in the end
27Best Line!
Lifes but a walking shadow a poor player, That
struts and frets his hour upon the stage, And is
heard of no more it is a tale Told by an idiot,
full of sound and fury, Signifying
nothing. - Act V s.5